- Nano Riantiarno
-
Nano Riantiarno Born Nobertus Riantiarno
6 June 1949
Cirebon, West JavaCitizenship Indonesian Education - Akademi Teater Nasional Indonesia
- Driarkara School of Philosophy
Occupation Director, actor, screenwright Years active 1971 - Awards SEA Write Award (1998) Nobertus Riantiarno (better known as Nano Riantiarno or N. Riantiarno; born in Cirebon, 6 June 1949) is an Indonesian actor, director, and playwright. Beginning his acting while in high school, he studied under Teguh Karya, acting in several movies and plays, until eventually establishing his own theatre troupe, Teater Koma, in 1977. His works, with their highly political messages, were often censored by Suharto's New Order government. In 1998 he won the SEA Write Award for his play Semar Gugat.
Contents
Biography
Riantiarno was one of a pair of twins born in Cirebon, West Java on 6 June 1949 to M. Albertus Sumardi, a railway employee, and Agnes Artini; the other twin was his brother Pujo Purnomo. He attended State Elementary School IV from 1955 to 1961, followed by State Junior High School II from 1961 to 1964. He then studied at State Senior High School I and II; during this time, he joined the Tunas Tanah Air troupe and read poetry at the local RRI station.[1]
After graduating high school, Riantiarno left for Jakarta to attend the Indonesian National Theatre Academy (Akademi Teater Nasional Indonesia).[2] At the academy, he studied Constantin Stanislavski's theories on realism and took an unregistered course under Teguh Karya. After the course was banned, he assisted Karya in the founding of the troupe Teater Popular, where he continued to practice acting under Karya's leadership. He also took up playwrighting and directing during his time.[3]
While working with Karya, Riantiarno performed in several plays and films. His credits with Teater Popular include Shakespeare's Macbeth, Tennessee Williams' The Glass Menagerie, Karel Čapek's The White Disease, and his own Doa Natal (Christmas Prayer). Riantiarno also acted in several of Karya's films, including Cinta Pertama (First Love) and Kawin Lari (Elope).[1]
In 1971, he began studying at the Driarkara School of Philosophy, and in 1975 left Teater Populer to travel throughout the archipelago and see various forms of traditional Indonesian theatre and other forms of folk art, including wayang and ketoprak.[2][3]
Finishing his travels, Riantiarno founded Teater Koma on 1 March 1977, with Rumah Kertas (Paper House) being its first production.[2] The title of the troupe was drawn from Riantiarno's belief that "theater is a journey without periods but filled with commas".[3] After taking a six-month hiatus to study at the International Writing Program in Iowa City, Iowa, in 1978, his troupe produced the well-received Maaf, Maaf, Maaf (Sorry, Sorry, Sorry). Another play, JJ, followed in 1979.[2]
During this period, the New Order government banned plays with "dissident" themes, often picking playwrights and writers deemed potential dissidents up for questioning arbitrarily. Riantiarno himself experienced repression several times,[2] with his 1985 play Opera Kecoa (Cockroach Opera, depicting prostitutes, transsexuals, and corrupt officials) causing all of his subsequent plays to require explicit permission from the government before being performed.[3]
Another of his plays, 1988's Sampek Engtay (based on the Chinese legend Butterfly Lovers), ran afoul of the New Order's discriminatory practices. Due to numerous pieces of legislation limiting Chinese Indonesian culture, the use of Chinese symbols was forbidden, as was the traditional barongsai (lion dance). Two years later Riantiarno was interrogated in response to his play Suksesi (Succession), which touched on themes of nepotism.[3]
In 1995, Riantiarno wrote Semar Gugat (Semar Accuses), using characters, such as Semar, from Javanese wayang. He received a SEA Write Award in 1998 for the work.[1]
After the fall of Suharto in 1998, Riantiarno's plays continued to contain political messages. Opera Sembelit (The Constipation Opera) dealt with "overbloated leadership", while Republik Bagong (Bagong's Republic) is a satire of inept leadership and an overabundance of political parties set in a wayang context.[3]
Influences
Riantiarno has been influenced by both traditional and Western theatre styles.[4]
Personal life
On 28 and 29 July 1978, Riantiarno married actress Ratna Karya Madjid Riantiarno. Together they have three sons.[1] Ratna acts for Teater Koma and is in charge of managing business and production.[3]
Productions
Riantiarno has produced numerous plays, including:[2][3][5]
- Rumah Kertas (Paper House, 1977)
- Maaf, Maaf, Maaf (Sorry, Sorry, Sorry, 1978)
- JJ (1979)
- Bom Waktu (Time Bomb, 1982, part one of a tetralogy)
- Opera Ikan Asin (Opera of the Salted Fish, 1983, adapted from Bertold Brecht's The Threepenny Opera)
- Opera Kecoa (Cockroach Opera; 1985, part two of a tetralogy)
- Opera Julini (Julini's Opera; 1986, part three of a tetralogy)
- Konglomerat Buriswara (Buriswara Conglomerate; 1987)
- Sampek Engtay (1988, based on the Chinese legend Butterfly Lovers)
- Banci Gugat (Transvestites Accuse; 1989, part four of a tetralogy)
- Suksesi (Succession, 1990)
- Opera Primadona (The Primadonna Opera; 1993)
- Opera Ular Putih (The White Snake Opera; 1994, based on the Chinese Legend of the White Snake)
- Semar Gugat (Semar Accuses; 1995)
- Cinta yang Serakah (Greedy Love; 1996)
- Opera Sembilit (The Constipation Opera; 1998)
- Presiden Burung (President of the Birds; 2001)
- Republik Bagong (Bagong's Republic; 2001)
References
- Footnotes
- ^ a b c d Teater Koma, N. Riantiarno.
- ^ a b c d e f Agusta 2008, Playwright.
- ^ a b c d e f g h Brown 2007, p. 1136.
- ^ Meyer-Dinkgräfe 2000, pp. 256-257.
- ^ Meyer-Dinkgräfe 2000, p. 257.
- Bibliography
- Agusta, Leon (24 February 2008). "Playwright N. Riantiarno is a visionary with a mission". The Jakarta Post. http://www.thejakartapost.com/news/2008/02/24/playwright-n-riantiarno-visionary-mission.html. Retrieved 20 August 2011.
- Brown, Ian Jarvis (2007). "Riantiarno, Nano (1949 - )". In Cody, Gabrielle. The Columbia Encyclopedia of Modern Drama. 2. New York: Columbia University Press. pp. 1135–1136. ISBN 9780231144247. http://books.google.ca/books?id=aQqOKWmjdQUC&pg=PA1136&dq=%22Opera+Kecoa%22&hl=en&ei=z5VPTqXACIforQeqt42tAg&sa=X&oi=book_result&ct=result&resnum=5&ved=0CD0Q6AEwBA#v=onepage&q=%22Opera%20Kecoa%22&f=true.
- Meyer-Dinkgräfe, Daniel (2000). Who's Who in Contemporary World Theatre. London: Routledge. ISBN 9780415141611. http://books.google.ca/books?id=safOk1Yr95wC&pg=PA257&dq=%22Opera+Kecoa%22&hl=en&ei=z5VPTqXACIforQeqt42tAg&sa=X&oi=book_result&ct=result&resnum=6&ved=0CEMQ6AEwBQ#v=onepage&q=%22Opera%20Kecoa%22&f=false.
- "N. Riantiarno" (in Indonesian). Teater Koma. http://www.teaterkoma.org/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=47%3An-riantiarno&catid=36%3Aangkatan-pendiri&Itemid=63&showall=1. Retrieved 20 August 2011.
Further reading
- Anwar, Syaeful (2005) (in Indonesian). N. Riantiarno: dari Rumah Kertas ke Pentas Dunia [N. Riantiarno: From the Paper House to the World Stage]. Jakarta: FFTV IKJ Press. OCLC 84723399.
External links
Categories:- 1949 births
- Living people
- People from Cirebon
- Indonesian dramatists and playwrights
- Indonesian actors
- Indonesian film directors
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